Jul 27 2010 - 8:12amLesson Planning
Jul 25 2010 - 10:19pmReport Card for Parents?
Jul 22 2010 - 1:57pm"Those" kids.....
Jul 19 2010 - 10:23pmLaughter in the Absurdity
Jul 19 2010 - 9:07pmYour Assignment
Jan 20 2009 - 1:56pmThis History of Barack Obama
Dec 29 2008 - 1:30am~Christmas Whoas~
Dec 1 2008 - 1:36amWhy don't girls take a crap?
Nov 25 2008 - 5:46amWho is the real Dracula
Nov 18 2008 - 3:56amHow to remember your dreams
Nov 18 2008 - 3:34amHow to cure hiccups
Nov 5 2008 - 9:02pmDrinking and driving joke
Nov 5 2008 - 6:10amRemembering B R Chopra
Oct 24 2008 - 11:27pmWhere in the world is Osoma?
Oct 22 2008 - 12:14amAre we Fading Away?
Oct 20 2008 - 2:42amHow to tell if your a Redneck
Oct 20 2008 - 2:40amI'm getting laid tonight
Oct 20 2008 - 1:31amA Priest walks into a bar...
Oct 17 2008 - 2:56amTom Cruise dead!
Oct 14 2008 - 11:28pmDeath Penalty for Bike Theives
Oct 10 2008 - 12:19amPenny Pincher
Oct 9 2008 - 3:30amLost and found
Oct 9 2008 - 12:40amthe lost art of honesty
Oct 8 2008 - 12:40amPrude fish? you're call...
Oct 6 2008 - 11:39pmPlenty of fish in the sea??
Oct 2 2008 - 5:32amHockey season is here
Oct 2 2008 - 5:31amUnknown heritage
Oct 2 2008 - 5:24amFat America
Oct 1 2008 - 9:04pmHome Recording (part 1 of 3)
Sep 28 2008 - 1:31pmBillion Dollar Buyout
Sep 28 2008 - 3:02amDo we Float or Do we Sink?
Sep 11 2008 - 1:26amThe legend of the Jersey Devil
Aug 31 2008 - 3:28amScience... A wonderful thing
Aug 31 2008 - 3:16amDr. Dre's Son Found Dead
Aug 31 2008 - 12:41amSites I Like
Aug 27 2008 - 3:40amThe Women of Our Future.
Aug 25 2008 - 8:49pmVenting About the Drama
Aug 24 2008 - 3:29amThe History Of Methamphetamine
Aug 21 2008 - 10:47pmCanadian Labour Market...
Aug 21 2008 - 10:00pmLove?
Aug 20 2008 - 10:51pmPicture this if you will
Aug 17 2008 - 4:58pmWhy Favre is so great

New hints for the origon of life

Article by: mo_money | October 21, 2008 - 3:49 am |

Vials holding the results of a famous chemistry experiment conducted 55 years ago have been discovered in dusty cardboard boxes, and a new analysis of their contents has revealed fresh insights into a big question: the origon of life on earth. In 1953, chemist Stanley Miller tried to duplicate the conditions present on the primordial earth in laboratory flasks, and while some of his results were published to great acclaim, other results were packed away and forgotten–until now.

Miller’s classic experiment involved putting atmospheric components thought to reflect those of the early Earth (ammonia, hydrogen, methane, and water) in a closed system and stimulating that mixture with an electric current to mimic the effects of lightning storms. He generated a small number of biochemically significant compounds, including amino acids, hydroxy acids, and urea, showing that conditions of primitive earth can create the building blocks of life [Ars Technica]. These results generated considerable excitement, but later researchers argued that Miller was wrong about the composition of the young earth’s atmosphere, and the experiment was written off as a novelty.

In the new study, published in Science [subscription required], researchers analyzed vials of material that were produced by a slightly different process that Miller had viewed as a flop; in that process, the gases were also mixed with a jet of steam to replicate conditions around an erupting volcano. Using modern methods to analyze the samples, researchers found they contained a total of 22 amino acids (including some that Miller had never identified in any of his experiments), the most complex mix yet produced by Miller’s method.

Study coauthor Jeffrey Bada, who was a graduate student of Miller’s, says the findings suggest that life could have originated on earth in the fiery and turbulent regions around volcanoes. “The model is that you have these small pockets, volcanic hot spots,” explains Bada, in which a volatile reducing atmosphere, one in which chemicals are more likely to react with one another, may have produced amino acids. The team’s reanalysis makes it plausible that a shallow tide pool tucked into the side of a volcano and a fortuitous bolt of lightning could have led to an abundance of amino acids 

However, theories on the origin of life have moved on since the days of Miller’s original experiments, and have taken decidedly new directions. The discovery of amino acids in meteorites suggested that the building blocks of life came from space, eliminating the need for finding chemical processes that could produce them on Earth. Some scientists have since suggested places like the ocean bottom as most likely to be where the building blocks first came together as a living organism…. “My take on this is you want to consider everything,” Dr. Bada said. “If you can have a homegrown synthesis, perhaps by this mechanism we’ve described here, complemented by stuff falling from space, well, you’ve got a really rich inventory of compounds to work with and set the stage for the origin of life” 


NOTE:
This was a article I found on the discovery magazine website... Just thought I'd share it.

Grade: B+ (3 people have graded this article.)